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Bruce Rowland (drummer)

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Albums
  
Amazing Grease

Instruments
  
Drums

Music group
  
Name
  
Bruce Rowland

Genres
  
Rock and roll, Folk rock

Role
  
Musician


Bruce Rowland (drummer) ultimateclassicrockcomfiles201507Redferns630

Born
  
22 May 1941Park Royal, Middlesex England, United Kingdom (
1941-05-22
)

Associated acts
  
The Grease BandFairport ConventionRonnie Lane

Died
  
June 29, 2015, Torquay, United Kingdom

Similar People
  
Alan Spenner, Neil Hubbard, Henry McCullough, Mick Weaver, Chris Stainton

Occupation(s)
  
Musician, songwriter

Bruce Rowland (22 May 1941 – 29 June 2015) was an English rock drummer best known for his memberships of The Grease Band and folk rock band Fairport Convention. He was also a prolific session musician.

Contents

Bruce Rowland (drummer) Bruce Rowland Monday May 22 BIRTHDAY

Early career

Bruce Rowland (drummer) wwwudiscovermusiccomwpcontentuploads201507

Rowland was born at Park Royal, Middlesex, on 22 May 1941. In 1968, he played drums on the Wynder K. Frog album "Out of the Frying Pan", and in 1969 joined The Grease Band, who were then Joe Cocker's backing band. He played for Cocker's performance at the Woodstock Festival, on Cocker's second album, Joe Cocker!, and on the UK top ten hit single "Delta Lady".

In 1970, Cocker and the Grease Band parted company, and Rowland stayed with them for their albums "The Grease Band" (1971) and "Amazing Grease" During this period, Rowland also played session for Shawn Phillips, Andy Mackay, Jackie Lomax, Gallagher and Lyle, and others, also contributing drums to the original recording of Jesus Christ Superstar. He spent some time with Ronnie Lane's Slim Chance, including his solo debut album, Anymore for Anymore, and the Lane/Ronnie Wood soundtrack album Mahoney's Last Stand before becoming a full-time sessionist.

Fairport Convention years

Rowland's involvement with Fairport Convention began in 1972, a particularly turbulent year for them, during which they had three drummers. His contributions later appeared on the unreleased, but much bootlegged "The Manor Album".

The arrangement became more formal during the recording of Rising for the Moon (1975), when Dave Mattacks left the band during the recording sessions, due to differences between himself and producer Glyn Johns. Following a tour, during which roadie Paul Warren played the drums, Johns suggested Bruce Rowland as a permanent replacement for Mattacks. By the following album, Gottle O'Geer, Rowland had become a full member of the band and his contributions extended beyond drums to keyboards and backing vocals, and this continued with the two succeeding studio albums The Bonny Bunch of Roses and Tipplers Tales, and the 1979 live album Farewell Farewell. Fairport took a break apart from playing concerts between 1979 and 1985 and during this period Rowland (sometimes at the same time as Mattacks) provided drums for these performances; he appears on the live album of the 1981 reunion, Moat on the Ledge. Rowland later quit the music business and moved to Denmark. He spent his later years in Brixham, Devon. He had a paint business and later sold it to retire and concentrate on creating a retirement home for himself and Barbara.

He died on 29 June 2015 of cancer, aged 74, not long after marrying his long term companion Barbara.

Following his death, some of his musical instruments have been auctioned in aid of Rowcroft Hospice.

References

Bruce Rowland (drummer) Wikipedia